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Chaotic scenes of passport control queues, piled up baggage on a conveyor belt and traffic gridlock at Manchester airport have been published.

Stewart Imeson took the photographs after arriving into the airport on a Thomas Cook Airlines flight from Palma on Sunday, June 26, according to the Manchester Evening News.

He told the newspaper: “There was a single member of Manchester Airport staff running up and down the corridor queues asking for families with children under 12 to go straight to the front, which only resulted in everyone else waiting even longer to move.”

He then photographed suitcases blocking the conveyor in the baggage hall.

“Our suitcases emerged over an hour after we left the plane, possibly because two arrivals were sharing the same conveyor,” Imeson said.

Outside the arrivals building, he and his family were faced with gridlock as cars queued to reach Terminal One to drop passengers off. They gave up waiting for their park and ride bus and walked instead.

Imeson added: “Surely on the grounds of safety and the passenger experience, the volume of flights should be limited to the capacity the airport can handle?”

A Home Office spokesman said on June 26 some queues failed to meet its targets of 95% of EEA passengers getting through in 25 minutes, with a 45-minute standard for non-EEA travellers.

He added: “Queues may occur if a significant number of flights arrive outside their scheduled arrival times or if there are a large number of non-EEA passengers, which take longer to process. E-gates are used for all eligible passengers.

“Our priority is to maintain the security of the border. All available resources were deployed at the airport to cope with the variations in the scheduled arrival times. All passengers were seen as quickly as possible”.

An airport spokesman told the newspaper: “Manchester airport prides itself in ensuring that all passengers’ journeys through the airport are as smooth as possible.

"We work closely with all our partners on site to ensure they provide sufficient resources to meet scheduled customer demand.

“We apologise to any customer who feels they have had a negative experience and will be raising their concerns with the partners involved.”

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